- MG 108 2-B-14-3
- Item
- [194-?]
Parte deH.A. Lewis fonds
A row of wheat is seen laying on the ground from snow.
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Parte deH.A. Lewis fonds
A row of wheat is seen laying on the ground from snow.
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Group photograph of some German settlers/homesteaders constructing a house
Two Ukrainian women stand with two children by a fence in front of a log home.
Unidentified man standing on combine
Parte deMJ General Photograph Collection
Unidentified man standing on combine pulling a swather in field
Steam locomotive number 6055 crossing the bald Canadian Prairie during the winter.
A Clydesdale stallion, Hiawatha, with cropped tail, four white legs and white face. Man at left holding bridle in yard with a stone fence in background.
Bio/Historical Note: By 1910, 19 horses had been purchased by the College of Agriculture that were good work horses or suitable for student class work. Two were purebred Clydesdales. Three light horses were also purchased. One named Barney was used in the morning to deliver milk to faculty in Nutana and in the afternoon on the buggy as Dean Rutherford made his farm rounds. In 1920 the Province asked the Animal Husbandry Department to establish a Clydesdale breeding stud. This led to development of an outstanding collection of prize winning horses that became a focus of the Department. In the 1920s the Percheron and Belgian breeders also demanded support for their breeds and so they were included in the university stud and some cross breeding was undertaken. The campus horses were used for field work for all Departments, general hauling and site work for new buildings. An unofficial use was for the Lady Godiva ride across campus each fall. By the 1940s it was clear that the era of horses as a main source of farm power was over. The final stallion used in the breeding program was the imported "Windlaw Proprietor," grand champion stallion at the 1946 Royal Winter Fair.
Team photograph of the four members of Danny Fink's championship team from Regina's Balfour Tech; Canadian Champs, hold the Saskatchewan Junior Curling Grand Award with their [coach?]
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Parte deL.G. Saunders fonds
A dirt road is seen winding though a wooded bluff.
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Parte deL.G. Saunders fonds
A path covered with fallen leaves is seen winding its way through a forest in autumn.
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Constitution and Bylaws Saskatchewan Grain Growers Association
Parte deOrganizations Collection
Handbook with the rules, regulations and organizational structure of the Saskatchewan Grain Growers Association
A large group of men, women and children are gathered around and on top of a large sod building [school?] with plank roof and glass windows. A pile of lumber in the foreground suggests recent construction.
Parte deW.C. Murray fonds
A Mennonite barn is seen to the rear of the house on a prairie homestead. Several chickens and a wagon are also seen in the foreground.
Parte deW.C. Murray fonds
A gentlman is seen standing in a farm yard watching a group of geese in the foreground.
Tuberculosis Control in the Indian [Indigenous] Population in Canada
Parte deJim Daschuk Collection
Report on Tuberculosis Control in the Indian [Indigenous] Population in Canada by Dr. P.E. Moore of the Department of Indian Affairs.
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Saskatchewan Leads Canada, North America, and the World in the Fight Against Tuberculosis
Parte deJim Daschuk Collection
Article from the Western Development Museum's Winning the Prairie Gamble on the history of tuberculosis in Saskatchewan.
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